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tv   CBS Overnight News  CBS  August 30, 2016 2:37am-3:38am PDT

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criticized for his method. when you are faced with a crisis -- a crisis of police activity, in communities in which you game, came, you feel defenseless. you have got to let people know there is never a good time to protest. there is never a rights way to protest. and that's just the reality. kaepernick lost his starting job last year, but says no one has tried to silence him for his vutz. the nfl released a statement on kaepernick saying players are encouraged but not required to stand during the national anthem. this thursday, the 49ers play the chargers in san diego. home to a large military base. the "cbs overnight news"
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threatening to spread through florida. theme parks are handing out mosquito repellent. offering free bug spray and lotion at their parks. so far there are no mosquito transmitted cases of zika in central florida. one i the rest are around miami. zika usually causes mild illness. many people don't know they have it. but the virus can cause devastating birth defects if a pregnant woman is infected much that researchers don't know about the disease. david begnaud has the the story of one case that's confounding doctors. 8 week old mykella is a medical mystery. exposed to zika in the womb but does not have the birth defect marked by a small head and
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>> look at the smile. >> maria fernandez bolivar is her mother. >> she looks normal to me, the doctors say she is not. ramirez bolivar contracted the zika virus. mykella has slight damage to an eye and stiffness. it took doctors several weeks to rule out several other causes. dr. ivan gonzalez part of her team. >> the ultrasound in venezuela and the one she had here in the united states before she gav looked like a there mall baby. >> normal baby. >> you didn't know there were abnormalities until after birth? >> after birth. >> reporter: scan of her brain show calcification, like a scar, could lead to seizures. her prognosis is uncertain. >> how long will you study a child like her? >> unknown to say how long we
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years. the effects of zika are not limited to babies. in puerto rico where zika is an epidemic, cdc reported increased cases of guillain-barlre syndrome. causes muscle weakness and numbness. this year, 34 patients with the syndrome had evidence of zika or similar virus infection. one person has died. in the u.s., the cdc set up a registry to follow pregnant women infected with zika. as many as 580 so far. james arouhe 16 babies have been born already with zika related birth defect. >> growing number of patients are getting sick inside the hospital. the culprit is drug resistant medication. hospitals spend millions trying clear out a bug, c-diff. now a hospital in vancouver taking a different approach. john blackstone, sniffs out the story.
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go over here. >> their sense of smell is a buff anything we can comprehend. >> reporter: with that remarkable sense of smell, angus springer spaniel on a mission to track down the most common kind of hospital superbug. it is known as c-diff and infection rates are on the rise. >> c-diff is a bacteria. forms spores. it can persist for long period of time. >> reporter: c-diff caused by antibiotic use or contact with contaminated surfaced and some times deadly causing half a million infections in the u.s. each year and killing 15,000 people. we can't see it with the naked eye. but angus can smell it. >> it will always be present in your hospital. what you are frying to do is control it. that's where angus comes into
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>> he is trained to detect it in the environment. the advantage for us is if he alerts on something, then, what we can do is targeted cleaning. going to couple with our ultraviolet disinfection machines. >> three years ago, theresa was training bomb and drug dogs when she contracted c-fiff and nearly died. her husband, a nurse at vancouver general hospital suggest she'd tried to train a degree to detect the super bug. >> it has an odor i can in a a degree to find it. she did. the hospital is mishated a first of its kind pilot program. >> alert. good man. >> they thought it was out of the box thinking. it helped that angus was kind of cute. oh, he is very loveable. i brought him home at ten weeks. even on the way home. i started training him just by throwing kibble out in the grass. giving him a search command. he started associating using his nose with reward. we paired the odor with it. learned to associate the cdiff
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hide a positive. >> he correctly identified all the c-diff positive odors we had. his success was between 95% and 100%. alert. goodboy, yeah. >> angus passed all his exams and will soon be working full time at vancouver general. >> the medical field we can go to other things we haven't thought of yet. >> there is an an, analogy we can mail the teaspoon of sugar in our coffee or tea. he can smell it in an olympic sized swimming pool.
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>> angus believed the only dog of his kind. not for long. >> brother dodger will be next. >> and she says he has been getting inquiries from hospitals around the world. >> we are happy to help anybody try to get their odi >> john blackstone. and the "cbs overnight news" will be right back. >> i'm alex trebek. if you're age 50 to 85, this is an important message. so please,
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well, christmas is not just around the corner. thank goodness. but it turns out that august is the perfect time for all of the amateur santas to polish up on thsa luke burbank caught up with hundred of jolly st. nicks at their annual convention in missouri. sure, we know santa's whereabouts in december. what about the summer? where is he hanging out then? you better watch out. you better not cry. branson, missouri of course. ? coming to town ? >> reporter: you are not hallucinating from the spiked
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this really happened. it's called the discover santa convention. just a few weeks ago it brought more than 800 santas and mrs. clauses to branson. ? ? they showed up on a variety of updated sleighs. >> ho-ho-ho. santa michael came here from kentucky in this model. >> one of the first things i did. lamborghini doors. santa has a cool sleigh. key on the back. wind up. drive it around. have it look like a toy down the road. here to catch up with old friend.
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we don't want to shave. covers three chins. we don't want to exercise either. >> reporter: do a little shopping. and hone their craft. we will do the scales. ady? the modern santa has to have more tricks in his bag than jolly ho-ho-ho. there were balloon-tying classes. >> the worst candy cane ever. but it is mine. >> reporter: tip makeup. i think bushier eyebrows are better for santa. >> even ukulele lessons. a word to our younger viewers who might be confused by the
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doing stuff that doesn't really seem santaly. we had it on good authority that the real santa was in branson, some where. its santa here? >> oh, of course. >> of course. >> yeah. yeah. >> i saw him on the bus. >> yes, yes, yes. >> this is the only way that he are just decoys, body these doubles. ? we wish you a merry christmas ? >> reporter: meet some of his helpersment santa mickey. santa brian. santa larry. santa tom. and santa vern. >> my inner child wears a red suit. s i get to laugh. joke. and sing songs. >> nick knock. who is there? >> olive who? >> olive of the other reindeer used to laugh and call him names. >> then there is this guy. >> santa tim connahan. he started the convention. been a santa for 47 years. runs his own santa academy. >> reporter: what kind of person makes a good santa? >> number one thing we teach in our schools. it is here. whatever you are doing, it doesn't matter whether you have a beard, it's what you have in your heart.
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enhance what they're doing. may get a little nicer suit. >> yeah, got to have your beard up. >> reporter: so this week in branson was practically crawling with the outfitters. >> what's the price of this? >> the way this is sitting pretty close. $1,100. >> well. >> but you won't regret it. >> reporter: a purchase santa might want to run by mrs. clause. what happens to a marriage when the husband decide to go full santa? >> is this a side of your husband's you hasn't seen before santa stuff? >> absolutely. >> my santa has wait many more beauty products in the bathroom tha than i do. >> yes. >> trish parish and jenny scott are both mrs. clauses to their santas. and they teach their own workshops for women. >> fluff up santa's beard.
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>> give me a ho-ho-ho. >> ho-ho-ho. >> what does that mean? >> santa. >> which brings us to one of the high lights of the week. the santa tug-of-war. watch carefully because the this is a -- santa grudge match. >> pull. pull. pull. >> reporter: our time was coming but there was still one thing i was wondering. >> why do you do it? >> it is a calling. a ministry. >> i do it from the heart. i do it because of the heart. what i feel. >> i do it because i love it. i love being santa. i love bringing smiles and joy and happiness new people. >> notice nobody said for the money. we are not in it for the money. have fun with it too. >> yes. >> yeah. >> my take away from the week in branson, yes, virginia, there really is a santa claus.
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? what fun it is to ride and
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an elder statesman of the cbs news family has announced he is retiring. charles osgood has spent nearly half a century here. the last 22 years as host of "sunday morning." he delivered the news himself. norah o'donnell has the story. >> some of you may have heard the sunday morning broadcasts very much longer. well, i am here to tell you that the rumors are true. >> reporter: few people would have begrudged charles osgood had he decided to anchor just a little bit longer. after all his program is the most watched news show on sunday morning. with its best ratings in decades.
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friends and family have been, asking me why i keep doing considering my age. i am pushing 84. it's just that, it has been such a joy doing it. who wouldn't want to be the one who gets to introduce these terrific storytellers. and the producers and writers and others who put this wonderful show together. and all of you. our still-growing audience. for all of your support and encouragement. it's been a great run. gend, charles kuralt in 1994.sbs >> we'll be in the good hand of charles osgood starting next sunday morning. >> i'm charles osgood. and this is sunday morning. >> reporter: he won the audience over with the trademark bow tie thousands, folksy style and poetic way with word. >> toe tapping is much more satisfying with shoes on. as sunday morning viewers know.
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mirror. >> osgood can tickle the ivories too. >> i know that face ? ? i've seen that face before ? >> wishing you had the days back again. >> osgood joined cbs news in 1971. his last tv broadcast will be september 25th. >> after which, you can still me on the radio. the osgood file continues. between now and my last sunday morning, i have got to practice singing that old weaver song -- ? so long it's been good to know you ? u ? long it's been good to know u ?long it's been good to know home ? ? and i've got to be drifting along ? the one and only charles good. that's the "cbs overnight news"
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calling it quits. hillary clinton's top aide, huma abedin splits with former congressman, anthony weiner after he is caught up in another sexting scandal. also tonight a wild scene at lax. we saw a mob, crowd running towards us. >> for the second time this month false reports of gunfire touch off panic at a major u.s. airport raising concerns about security. takata linked to a death. this time a truck carrying airbag inflaters explodes and levels a house. >> and remember, gene wilder. and his comedy from "willie wonka" to "young frankenstein."
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>> sorry, frankenstein. >> it's alive! ? ? >> announcer: this is the "cbs overnight news." >> it is about the last thing hillary clinton's campaign needed a scandal involving the husband of her top aide huma abedin. anthony weiner former new york congressman was caught sexting again. abedin announced she is splitting with him. donald trump wasted no time clinton. here's nancy cordes. >> we are moving forward. >> reporter: abedin stood by weiner the first time he was caught, second and the third. today "the new york post" published a suggestive photo he had sent to a woman as his toddler son lay next to him. within hours, abedin release aid statement from the hamptons where clinton has been fund-raising. after long and painful consideration, and work on my marriage, i have made the decision to separate from my husband.
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anthony and i remain devoted to doing what is best for our son who is the light of our life. >> can you tell us -- >> weiner's troubles date back to 2011 when he accidentally tweeted a racy photo of hill self. >> was that a picture of you? >> the main question a lot of people are asking, did i send the photograph. idid not. >> reporter: the outspoken congressman eventually owned up and resigned. >> i have done things i deeply regret. >> reporter: with abedin's support he attempted a comeback mayor. immortalized in an intimate documentary. >> it's like living a nightmare. >> reporter: abedin is so close to the clintons her wedding was officiated by the former president. but her relationship with the clintons has also landed her at the center of lawsuits and congressional investigations. as critics argue that her role at the nexus of the state department and clinton foundation blurred ethical
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issue. >> i don't like huma going home at night and telling anthony weiner all of the seek relgts. >> reporter: trump couldn't resist weighing in on the separation today. accusing clinton of bad judgment for having someone like weiner in her orbit. norah, we notice that weiner has deleted his twitter account about 5 1/2 years too late. >> tonight no longer appears to be in the orbit. thank you, nancy. >> trump is having problems of his own including question as illegal immigration. after he backed off of a vow to deport 11 million undocumented immigrants. trump will try to clarify in a speech wednesday in phoenix. here is major garrett. >> equal protection under the law must include the consistent application of our immigration laws. >> reporter: donald trump accused president obama and indirectly hillary clinton of
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painting a picture of illegal border crossings and no serious deportation policy. >> hillary clinton wants to have a totally open border where people can pour in. >> reporter: more mexicans left the u.s. than came here between 2009 and 2014. and, statistics apare to shoef the obama administration has deported more than undocumented immigrants than the two previous administrations. >> advocates for undocumented immigrants, like j of la raza, argues a trump padministration would be worse. >> you called president obama the deporter in chief. what would president trump be? >> i guess he would be the exhorter-in-chief, exhorting, extreme policies, extreme rhetoric that would be very scary and frightening. >> we will use immigration law to prevent crimes and we will not wait.
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prioritize deportations of criminals. president obama has said the same thing. in 2015, 59% of deported in grants commit aid crime in the u.s. trump's campaign manager, kellyanne conway. >> he will enforcing the law. a novel concept in washington, d.c. where they look to layer law upon law and never enforce what we have. >> obama era deportation statistics include those captured at or near the border something no previous administration counted as deportation. trump points instead to a 40% decline in deportations of immigrants found more than 100 miles from the border as evidence, current laws are not being enforced. >> major investigate. thank you. we turn to john dickerson, our cbs news political director and moderator of face the nation. john, what does the trump campaign hope to achieve with the new speech wednesday about his in graduation proposals?
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voters on the side lines because he is too risky. but has to do it in a way that doesn't trade away his base, love his blunt authenticity on immigration he will speak about. that ladies to confusion. a couple weeks ago, donald trump said he would not pivot just before he pivoted to a new strategy. on immigration, whale he says he is not changing, at the same time he is. during the primaries he said he would deport 11 million undocumented immigrants. so fast your head would spin. his quote. now his campaign is stressing details. emphasis is no longer on the swiftness, but how he is weighing the details. too big a shift. he will enrage conservatives, skeptical about politicians who wobble. too little change he will do nothing to spark a reconsideration by those nervous gop voters on the side lines. >> labor day just around the corner. homestretch of this campaign. whatter use does the clinton campaign need to deal with?
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everybody thinking of him in the most negative form. that's one challenge. the other she has to deal with stories that might exacerbate her great weakness on the question of trust. that means, any of these new stories about her e-mail server, or the easy relationship between the clinton foundation and the state department. she has to keep all of the focus off of that. because it gets to that central question, voters have about her. which is her trust worthiness. >> today her campaign had to deal with the issue hillary clinton, one of her top s, huma abedin and embarrassing texts her husband sent. does that change things? >> i don't think it changes anything. voters are worried about bigger issues, and still a long way away from voting. and there are so many more news cycles to come. this will probably be forgotten. >> smaller distraction. john dickerson. thank you. >> thank you, norah. >> the "cbs overnight news" will
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there is a tropical storm warning for the north carolina coast from cape lookout to oregon inlet and pamlico sound. a storm is expected to strengthen and make landfall late tomorrow. it could bring 5 inches of rain. heavy rain and h flash flooding to day in colorado springs. streets became rushing rivers. it came on so quickly, drivers got stuck. their cars had to be pulled out of the floodwaters. >> the epidemic of gun violence in chicago claimed a victim. the cousin of chicago bulls star dwayne wade. 32-year-old, nykea aldridge was on the way home friday, pushing
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baby on the sidewalk on chicago's south side when she took her last step. she wasn't the shooter's target but she is dead all the same. eddie johnson is the police superintendent. >> she wasn't aware that her short life would stand as an example for what is a clear failure in the criminal justice system here in chicago. >> two arrested suspects are convicted felons. brothers with known gang connections. neither served full sentences. one got out in februa. to keep prisons from overcrowding, most gun offenders serve 50% of their sentence here. the mayor, rahm emanue -- >> repeat gun offenders who run in and out of the criminal justice system with no consequences back on the streets wreaking havoc. >> in serious crimes, such as murder do offenders serve more than half sentences.
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for higher bond to keep repeat offenders off the streets awaiting trial they've want mandatory minimum sentences that would remove judicial discretion. >> whatever punishment they get. they should have to abide by that. and serve their time. that's, that's the bottom line. >> diane aldridge is nykea's mother. >> gone too soon. too soon. too soon. she was taken away from us. not been related to a famous basketball player it is unlikely her murder would draw so much attention. norah, hers was one of 11 murders "the chicago tribune" counted over the course of this past weekend. rounding out the most violent month chicago has experienced in 20 years. dean reynolds. thank you. more than 280 flights dear
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when lax descended into pandemonium because of a security scare. mireya villarreal has the the story. with guns drawn, l.a.x. airport police detained a man carrying a plastic sword, dressed as zorro. minutes later. chaos. >> stand up and go. >> police were flooded with calls about an active shooter and gunshots in terminal 8. >> one world way. one world way. >> reporter: reports turned out to be false. panic spread quickly to terminals. as well as on social media. awe call on! run! >> reporter: passengers ran in all directions, dragging luggage and carrying children to safety. >> all of sudden, there was screaming. there is a shooter. there is a shooter. everyone was starting to storm and run down the stairs. it was crazy. >> some travelers ended up on the tarmac.
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>> l.a.x. police chief said most passengers left on their own. >> these are difficult situations. because the there were multiple reports of, of something that was -- something significant. and pe tdangerous. >> two weeks ago a false alarm at new york's jfk airport. security expert, henry willis questions whether the right protocols are in place to prevent this kind of mayhem. >> people left there in a chaotic fashion. ended up exiting. in some cases out on the tarmac. in other cases on to open roadways. where they put themselves possibly in physical harm. that is a breakdown in public safety. >> things seem to be running smoothly here at lax. in all. 281 flights were delayed. and two were canceled. norah, when the initial reports came in that shots were being fired, here at the airport, the lax police department was able to send out text message, notification, telling anyone within a five-mile radius, to
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their own safety. >> all right. mireya villarreal, thank you so much. more heavy fighting today along the turkey/syria border. but it is not going quite the way the u.s. wants. holly williams on the dilemma posed by america's friends that are foes. >> reporter: it began with turkey launching an offensive against isis last week. sending tanks and syrian rebel fighters over its border and into the town turk yew turkey is a close u.s. ally. and backed up by air strikes. after an easy victory against isis, the syrian rebels headed further south to take on kurdish fighters. turkey views the kurdish group as terrorists. but the kurdish fighters are backed by the u.s. they work together with american special forces. and we have seen them up close.
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so, now, two u.s. backed groups, who were both supposed to be fighting islamic extremists. are instead clashing with each other. this video appears to show members of the kurdish group, captured and hue mill yamiliate fighters. america's special envoy, brett mcgurk, said unacceptable. the u.s. says kurdish fighters are withdrawing from the contested area. norah this isn't the first time that u.s.-backed groups have clashed. the more they fight each other the longer it will take to combat isis. >> holly williams in turkey. thank you. after facing severe backlash for jacking up the price of its epipen allergy treatment, mylan plans to sell a generic version.
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today, japan's takata corporation confirmed a truck carrying airbag inflaters and volatile chemical blew up last week in texas.
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>> the blast leveled a home shooting pieces of the tractor-trailer and contents up to a mile. ten homes in a two-mile radius reported damage. not much is left of the semiit was hauling takata airbag inflaters and volatile propellant. the maverick county texas sheriff says the scene looked like a bomb went off. part of the engine flew at least 30 yards ending up in a house. after a two day search. police determined, the 67-year-old woman died in the search that destroyed her home. texas department of public safety investigators say it happened 2:15 last monday morning outside the sparsely populated town of quemado, the truck went off at a curve and crashed into a hope. he and a passenger were able to got out before the explosion that damaged a toyota suv with two people inside. all four air lifted to san antonio. the accident comes as takata faces one of the largest recalls
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defective inflaters that can explode sending schlep nell into the passenger cabin. accidents have killed 13 people. transportation secretary, anthony fox expressed concern about the crash. we are just learning that federal safety investigators joined the case. norah in a statement to cbs news, takata says it has strict procedures when it comes to transportation of its products. that meet or exceed requirements. >> kris, tha y records as this man. we'll remember juan gabriel. next. you know your heart loves megared omega-3s... but did you know your eyes, your brain, and your joints
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but they'll never get me on the mattress! finally there's a disinfectant mist designed for sofas, mattresses and more. introducing new lysol max cover. its innovative cap has a 2x wider spray that kills 99.9% of bacteria. max cover is another great way to lysol that. talk about a cold case. scientists believe they solved 3 million-year-old mystery. what killed lucy one of our earliest relatives. lucy walked upright in africa. but it may have been a tall from a tree that killed her. lucy's skeleton had breaks in her arm, shoulder, ankle and knee. fans are paying tribute to one of latin music's biggest stars. juan gabriel died yesterday of a heart attack. memorial is growing at gabriel's star on the hollywood walk of fame.
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where he grew up. gabriel performed friday night at packed l.a. forum. he sold more than 100 million records in his career. one of his biggest hits "eternal love." ? ? juan gabriel was 66. in a moment, we will let gene wilder get the last laugh. >> i used to look like gary cooper. cooper cuper! >> come mix where rockefellers
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actor and writer gene wilder died overnight from complications of alzheimers disease. he was 83. wilder brought us so many mention of his name could make you laugh. here's john blackstone with some of those moments. >> give my creation life! >> reporter: with his wild hair and often manic persona, gene wilder gave life to a long list of hilarious and hysterical characters from the mad scientist in "young frankenstein." >> my name, it's pronounced frankenstein.
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producers." >> nothing, i-- my blue blanket, give me my blue blanket! >> reporter: that role earned him an oscar nomination for best supporting actor. >> you must be igor. >> no, it's pronounced igor. >> reporter: he was also nominated for writing the screenplay for "young frankenstein," along with his frequent collaborator director mel brooks. together they took "blazing saddles" where no western had goneor [ gunfire ] he could be depended on to deliver the unexpected. wilder was not the first actor considered for the starring role in "willie wonka and the chocolate factory" in 1971. ? if you want to view paradise ? >> reporter: fred astaire was reportedly in the running, but today it seems hard to imagine anyone else in what has become a children's classic. >> i didn't want to do hamlet or macbeth.
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but you can be real and huge at the same time. >> reporter: he had huge success in a series of collaborations with richard pryor. >> that's right, that's right, we bad. >> uh-huh. >> reporter: the on screen chemistry with gilda radner continued off screen. they were married from 1984 until her death from ovarian cancer five years later. he became actively involved in raising cancer awareness, helping foth as well as gilda's club. but as he told cbs's sunday morning in 2005, gene wilder lived a life with no regrets. >> i'm very happy where i am. i don't want to change anything. >> reporter: john blackstone, cbs news, san francisco. and that's the "cbs overnight news" for this thuz die. for some of you the news continues. for others check back with us later for "the morning news" and cbs news this morning. "from the broadcast center in
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o'donnell. ? it's tuesday, august 30th, 2016. this is the "cbs morning news." clinton aide huma abedin announces she's leaving husband anthony weiner. donald trump praises her decision and slams clinton in the process. people in the southeast are keeping their eyes on the tropics with one storm set to slam the outer banks today and another taking aim at the gulf coast. a cross country flight is forced to land over an unruly passenger. now the pilot described the
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? in a world of pure imagination ? ? and remembering gene wilder, the comedic icon who leaves behind a legend of laughter. >> my name is pronounced frankenstein. good morning from the studio 57 newsroom at cbs headquarters here in new york. good to be with you, i'm anne-m g donald trump has plans now to deliver a major speech on immigration tomorrow. and today, a top california republican meg whitman who ran for governor will campaign for hillary clinton but this morning's headlines focus on one of the clinton's top aides. huma abedin is separating from her husband former congressman anthony weiner following yet another sexy episode. hena daniels is here with details.
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nominee used the latest scandal to attack the democratic nominee. hillary clinton pressed on with fund fla-raising in the hampton monday. closest aide huma abedin announced her split from congressman anthony weiner hours after it was of a photo he allegedly sent is to a woman laying next to their son. he was forced to resign five years ago and jump out of the new york mayoral race. the latest scandal provided the latest fodder for donald trump. >> huma abedin has access to classified information, how
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nobody will ever know. but to think that it's very likely that much of this information anthony weiner would know about. >> reporter: some grew criticism after former ku klux klan member gave a call asking them to cast their vote for the senate bid and the republican nominee. the trump campaign immediately disavowed the move. trump is scheduled to address immigration tomorrow. d pfund-raisers on long island society. a new monmouth university poll out monday has her seven points ahead of trump among likely voters. anne-marie. >> hena daniels in new york, thank you. hena. there are two high profile races including senators who have run-ins with donald trump. arizona senator john mccain is trying for his second term.
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entered the race. they are trying to maintain control of the senate. coming up on "cbs this morning" we'll talk with cbs news political contributor mark leibovich who interviewed anthony weiner at the democratic convention last month. a tropical storm warning is in effect this morning for a stretch of north carolina's outer banks. a tropical depression that's expected to become a tropical storm is forecast to leave the shore later today. coastal areas are see wind gusts of up to 45 miles per hour and flood-producing rain. folks along florida's gulf coast are preparing for another tropical depression that could hit later this week. it has sustained winds of 35 miles per hour that's headed west. but expected to curve back towards the florida gulf coast. thursday night's preseason game between the tampa bay buccaneers
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hurricane madeline has storms of 123 miles per hour and could pass dangerously close to the big island of hawaii by tomorrow. hurricane lester say powerful category 4 storm with winds of more than 140 miles per hour. lefter may pass near hawaii around labor day weekend. there could be more wet weather in central colorado today. not good news where folks in colorado springs who got hit producing rain. many drivers got caught in the high waters and forced to be rescued. brock turner is being released after serving less than half of his six-month sentence for good behavior. an alaska airlines jet headed from seattle to new york had to land in minneapolis after
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door. the flight crew calmly explained the situation to ground controllers. >> we're going to end up dropping off one of our passengers early. two four zero. >> the passenger was taken off the aircraft, questioned by police, and then taken to a hospital for observation. the senate in decide as early as today whether to impeach the president. protesters demonstrating in sao paulo last night. she was proclaiming her innocence yesterday during a 14-hour impeachment trial. thousands of migrants were rescued by the italian navy and other ships in the mediterranean sea. the rescue took place about 13
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they had been traveling a small crowded wooden boat. some jumped into the water swimming for the rescue ship. men, women and children were trying to make it to europe hoping for a better life. the death of comic gene wilder saddened movie fans. mel brooks called him one of the truly great talents of our time. he blessed every film we did with his magic and he blessed me with his friendship. wilder left a legacy of laughter. >> he's my creation! >> reporter: with his wild hair and often manic persona gene wilder gave life to a long list of hilarious and hysterical characters to the mad scientist in "young frankenstein." >> my name is pronounced frankenstein.

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